![]() You would think with all this unselfishness that Katrina would be annoying, but she’s not. She wants to stop fighting with her best friend. ![]() ![]() Twice, Malcolm offers her her heart’s “desire” - first fortune and then fame - and twice, she lets it slide, almost purposefully, through her fingers. While Katrina seems a bit too angst-ridden at times, she is also amazingly unselfish. ![]() Selfors has written another delightful, unexpected romance. Then what she wants is something she really can’t have. That’s a tricky one, since Katrina is not only average, but a bit driftless, too: she has no idea what she really wants… until she gets to know Malcolm a bit better. ![]() That is, not until the guy - whose name is Malcolm - shows up at an assembly, wearing a kilt, and knowing her name, saying that, in thanks, he wants to grant her innermost desire. Katrina is, however, a decent human being, and so when she opens the coffee shop one day, and spies what seems to be a homeless man in the alley, she leaves him a cuppa joe, a bag of pastries, and some chocolate-covered coffee beans, and doesn’t think anything of it. She works in her grandmother’s coffeehouse, which doesn’t exactly do brisk business most of that goes next door to the new Java Heaven. ![]()
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